Showing posts with label Magazine Covers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magazine Covers. Show all posts

Friday, June 24, 2011

Fab Magazine's double ‘Escapism Issue’


Fab magazine is out with it's june double cover issue tagged the  ‘Escapism Issue’ .
As well as obtaining exclusive interviews with the comeback king Bilal and the brilliant Blitz the Ambassador, in this issue FAB Magazine managed to sit down with Nigerian multi-platinum selling, award-winning musician singer-songwriter Darey Art Alade – his first major UK interview. Zimbabwe’s talented twosome Bkay and Kazz and up and coming artists Retta and Bluey Robinson also add to the list of big names featured in this jam-packed sixth edition. Fashion is also not left out in this issue as they explore the latest fashion trend..'Colour blocking'.
more after the jump






Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Will Smith schools us on what 'Men really Want' in a relationship

In a recent interview with Essence magazine , actor Will Smith revealed the screts to a happy relationship with your beau, schooling us on not only love and marriage, but what men need to be happy. Excerpts.....

If You Marry Your Best Friend, You’re Good
Every man wants to marry his homie, Will explained. A lot of women will impress them, but it’s the one they can

more after the jump

 always laugh with and be themselves with that will ultimately impress them the most
 If you can be yourselves around each other, 100 percent of the time, and they can make you life like no one else can, you’ll never have a dull moment together.



Remind Him of What He Has
When you start to feel that you’re nagging your husband to the point of no return and nothing you’re saying is getting through, Will suggests you try a new approach. Hold him close, look him right in the eyes, and tell him that you love him, you’re right there, and you always will be, BUT you need him to pick his socks up – right now.  As Will puts it, it’s important to remind him that your request is coming from a good place, and what you want is a small thing in the grand scheme of things. Um, genius!

All Men Need A Little Space
If you don’t give your husband thirty minutes to himself when he first gets home he’ll stop coming home,” Will told me, straight up. (You’re thinking, no way, right? I did too!) When I asked Will when a wife was supposed to say her piece, he responded, “anytime after that.” Will reminded me that everyone’s home needs to feel like a happy place, and it won’t if you’re “greeted with negativity” every time you enter the door. Touché Will. Talk about a pause for the cause.
Focus on Balance and Excitement Always
According to Will and Jada’s way of thinking about marriage, maintaining a happy union isn’t just about making time for one another, it’s about making the time count too. Excitement and mystery are everything, he said. Surprise them, let them know you love them, laugh together – whatever it takes to put a smile on their face.






All the men who dated and dumped Genevieve?


These mags and ther stories sef! They help you keep track of everything.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Beyonce on the cover of Time magazine.......Reveals 7 looks that helped shape her career

The Beyonce cover reign continues. The singer is on the cover of the latest edition of Time magazine.


In related gist, the singer revealed to W magazine 7 iconic looks that helped shape her career.

She tells the Magazine that she prefers choosing outfits that her fans could buy and that her mission is to play a “Powerful Woman” in every video.
Check the iconic moments below......
On “CRAZY IN LOVE” (2003)“I had just turned 21, and this was my first solo video. I wanted to be a female version of James Dean and wear an iconic white T-shirt and jean shorts. I always think about

more after the jump
wearing something a fan could buy and make her own; as a young girl I remember seeing so many artists, and then I’d try to dress like them. I sewed zippers on my jackets to be like Michael Jackson.
I’m wearing red pumps in the video. As a child I trained myself to dance in very high heels. At 13, in Destiny’s Child, we were told to wear heels, but at first we couldn’t walk in them. We couldn’t keep our knees straight. But we learned, and that became the image of Destiny’s Child: so young and so glamorous. Now I have a rule that my dancers have to wear their heels when I’m wearing my heels. They say, ‘Please take your shoes off, Beyoncé.’ At home, I’m always barefoot. And I have a heavy walk without heels. When they hear me thumping through the house, they say, ‘Oh—Beyoncé’s up!’”
Sasha Fierce was born during the ‘Crazy in Love’ video. I’m naturally a shy person, and I was used to performing in a group, where it’s about female camaraderie—we were all going through the same things at the same time. As Sasha Fierce, I was on my own. It was about letting go, about showing my sensuality in a new way: I became Sasha Fierce.”

On “WHY DON’T YOU LOVE ME” (2010)This video was a secret: I paid for and codirected it and didn’t tell my label or my management. The clothes and jewelry are from my closet, the wigs are mine, and I did my own makeup. We did eight looks in one day in this great house that belonged to a producer who worked with Dorothy Dandridge. He had pictures of her on the wall, so her spirit is in the video, too. I love Super 8 film and wanted to get those saturated colors. It’s a different drama—the tears and martinis and cigarettes. I wanted to channel the past for the present.”
 “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)” (2008)—-”My mom made the one-shouldered bodysuits the night before the video. Again, I wanted to wear something that any fan could wear. I’m obsessed with Bob Fosse, and I always saw the look of this video as very simple, very Fosse-inspired. It was one of the hottest days on record in New York, and we didn’t know it at the time, but we were shooting in an old porn studio. I began to get suspicious because every dressing room had a theme. I was in the jungle room, and I realized they had made a porno in there. There was no air-conditioning in the studio and that added to the drama—we were shiny and sweaty.”
“Deja Vu” (2006)—-We shot this in New Orleans right after Hurricane Katrina, and the choreography was almost tribal in my mind. There’s something spiritual about Louisiana, where my family is from, and I thought of Josephine Baker. She had a way of dancing that was almost possessed. I used her as a reference and combined her with Brigitte Bardot. My hair, the bustier: It’s very Bardot. I love to mix things that you wouldn’t put together–like Barker and Bardot. They both had that French influence, which is really strong in Louisiana.

Sasha Fierce Album Art (2008)—”I’m wearing a gold-plate breastplate Jose Barrera. It was difficult to put my arms down, which is why they are up in the picture. The gold handpiece was made for me–it’s kind of like a futuristic Michael Jackson glove.
Sasha Fierce was born during the crazy in love video. I’m naturally a shy person, and I was used to performing in a group, where’s it’s about female camaraderie–we were all going through the same things at the same time. As Sasha Fierce, I was on my own. It was about letting go, about showing my sensuality in a new way: I became Sasha Fierce.”



“Telephone” (With Lady Gaga) (2010)—”Gaga is my girl! I’m her biggest fan. When i first saw her perform, I actually called her and said, ‘You are great!’ That was before her popularity hit, and we had a natural connection. Later, she asked me to do her video, and I said, ‘I trust you, Gaga. I’ll do whatever you want me to do.’ I played a bad, bad girl. When I put on the Bettie Page wig, I got into the character. I started researching Bettie Page and tried to channel her pinups and poses. The video ended up being very much like Quentin Tarantino’s movies. He gave us his blessing, even loaned us the car with P*SSY WAGON written on the side from Kill Bill. My mom said, ‘Do you have to use that car?’”


“Run The World (Girls)” (2010) —”This is the power stand, the next chapter of my life. I do this job because it makes me high and inspires people. In the video, most of all I wanted to show that I’m proud to be a woman. I had read about powerful African men who have hyenas as pets, and I wanted to create a world where women run the world, so in the video I have these hyenas as pets. I’m wearing a Givenchy Couture gown and I’m holding up these crazy hyenas. There’s dirt on the dress, but I’m still pure regal. I wanted to push the theatrics to make a point: Women rule.”




  Which is your favourite look? 
         I love her 'Crazy in love' and 'De ja vu' looks. She looked Messy Sexy in 'De ja vu'.
     As for 'Crazy in love'? There is something sexy about red stilletto heels.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Beyonce on the cover of Dazed and Confused magazine


            Singer beyonce is on the July issue of Dazed and Confused magazine.
In the magazine you will spot the diva rocking some eccentric pieces.
more pics after the jump



Nike Oshinowo Soleye Shows She Is The 'Business' On Wow Magazine Cover

    You have to give it to the WOW! Magazine team.They know how to put out a beautiful  magazine cover. Ex beauty queen and Style Icon Nike Oshinowo Soleye is rocking a serious pose and shows who the boss is. Rocking  the cover with her, is  current Miss Nigeria, Damilola Agbajo.

  What I love about this cover is the fact that Nike is rocking a trouser suit,but still looks hot. The look is softened with chandelier earrings and sexy red lips.
Damilola also holds her own in that beautiful dress.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Nigerian Designer Deola Sagoe Gets Essence Magazine Feature



Nigerian Designer Deola Sagoe got a feature in Black American magazine Essence recently. Excerpts.........
ESSENCE.com: You've become very well known among African fashion enthusiasts. How do you feel about that success?
DEOLA SAGOE: From the start I always wanted to represent the African woman in terms anybody anywhere would describe as beautiful. I'm Nigerian, I grew up with a lot of natural beauty around me, just here and there without

more after the jump
pretension. I was amazed by the beauty of the women I grew up with and the way they embodied my culture. This is perhaps the ultimate success of my brand - that we have been able to give the African woman, and more widely the black woman, her own pedestal where she stands in all her beauty and is admired the world over.
After two decades of being in business, what defines my success is that I fused my cultural heritage with an intrinsic sense of beauty and came up with designs that contributed to the fashion dialogue. My designs were chosen, they were recognized and have stood the test of time, lately we have been reaching an ever-wider audience and this itself is success...
ESSENCE.com: As an African designer, you are always seen is a representative of that continent. Is that how you wish to be seen, or as a designer with her own unique worldview?
DEOLA : Every true designer I know has his or her own deeply held point of view. This is usually fashioned by their environment and concerns, but also from that uniqueness that comes from within you, and as such is not defined by geography or location. I'm black, I'm a Nigerian, and I'm a woman - guess it's no surprise that you're going to see that in my work no more than if I was Japanese or Dutch.
ESSENCE.com: So you seek to strictly represent your homeland?
DEOLA: I would like to think I represent an Africa that is still yet to be fully appreciated, an Africa that is not just one homogenous blob but a rich continent of diversity and expression. African cultures are so fluid by the way, it's mixes of European, British, French, Portuguese from our colonial past and American coming in from modern day enterprise and international business. If there's a mixing pot somewhere on this Earth it's got to be Africa that's why things are often very rich here.
ESSENCE.com: How does your Nigerian culture in particular inform your work as a designer?
DEOLA: Nigeria is a nation often debated across the world but actually rarely truly investigated. Nigeria is a strong nation; the people are proud and culturally very rich and diverse. For me it's like a goldmine that I can delve into. I go in the mine and when I return to the light I discover that I have gems of every description, and I'm usually surprised! What I mean is, whenever I'm designing I'll start with some element of my culture and then I'll go on and add myself to it, what I'm feeling at the time, and then, by a miracle, things start to just happen. It's really the most wonderful thing to be a kind of conveyor or channel for something new to come into being, and yet you can feel its lineage.It has a link to history and culture. The Nigerian consciousness has yet to be fully explored but everyday it keeps offering up gems.

ESSENCE.com: You've had the opportunity to show your collection at New York Fashion Week in the past, do you have plans to connect/expand more so into the U.S. market in the future?
DEOLA: Every market interests me. A new market means I can get out my ideas further and receive new ideas too. That's the beauty of a global community. America is especially interesting because there is also a mixing of cultures where ideas fuse together and generally advancement occurs. In America you can make ideas of change happen because there are many schools of thought -  the many body types and body shapes and different aesthetic points of view are all rubbing against each other and this creates energy.
Where we are right now at Deola Sagoe is in the enviable position of being very good at what we do. We are very refined and distilled, from the fabrics we create to the techniques we use to make our garments... The U.S. market is always interested in something good and we kind of feel that right now 'we have the goodness' as it were... (Laughs)
ESSENCE.COM: Who is the Deola Sagoe woman?
DEOLA: The Deola Sagoe woman has the mysterious and engaging complexity that is a gift to all women.One day she is dead serious the next she has the naughtiest sense of humor. One day she is all woman the next she is ingénue. She appreciates meaning in things though, she likes to know that she is part of something larger than just her self- hence her appreciation of our fabrics, which have history (and majesty frankly). She definitely enjoys standing out, she is not a worker bee, but finds it far more interesting when everyone has a different point of view and yet everyone can still get along. She is colorful - she uses color to mirror her mood.
ESSENCE.com: There's a debate going on about whether African designers should feel obligated to use African print in all of their collections. How do you feel about this and do you feel you have a duty to use African prints?
DEOLA: I've never been interested much in restrictions. 'I must be this way and you must be that way' - limiting. And frankly, we do not have the time to be overawed by limits. I use African fabrics but I often mix with many other fabrics. I would actually like to see other designers of the world take an interest in African fabrics. They don't appear to know that much about our fabrics as we have learned a lot about theirs. Also, it's bigger really than prints, which represent only one typology of fabric techniques, mark my words there are so many African fabrics, derived from ingenuitive materials, or made with special techniques... It's like a said before... a treasure trove.



Source


Thursday, June 2, 2011

RMD and family grace june edition of Genevieve magazine


The brand new issue of Genevieve Magazine features one of Nigeria’s finest actors and ladies man Richard Mofe Damijo. In this edition you get to see his cute kids, life as a family man and a whole lot more! Find out all about it in the June 2011 issue of Genevieve Magazine.  Excerpts..........

In the late 80s, he was one of Nigeria’s biggest rising stars. The first actor to be paid a million naira for a movie role, he starred in several award-winning roles and soon became a household name as Segun Kadiri in the popular soap, Checkmate. So when Richard Mofe Damijo checked out of
more and pics of his children after the jump
his movie career to study for another university degree, you could almost hear the hearts of his fanbase breaking as one. Worse still, when he returned to Nigeria, it wasn’t to take up a script, but an appointment with the Delta state government, first as the Special Adviser on Culture and Entertainment, now as the Commissioner for Culture and Tourism. From movies to politics, RMD has seen it all and lived more lives than most, from experiencing teenage pregnancy to surviving the tragic scandal surrounding the death of his first wife, MEE. But what can compare to his journey as a father? From a reluctant young dad, to a dedicated family man, RMD has now arrived at a place where he is able to say family comes first and know exactly what that means.
Photo Credit.....naijan

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Uti And Millen Cover Complete Fashion Magazine


Big Brother Allstars winner, Uti Nwachukwu and Tanzanian model Millen are the celebrities gracing the cover of Complete Fashion's latest double cover issue. In this issue Uti talks about something very close to his heart now..... the need to create awareness about Prostrate cancer while Tanzanian model Millen talks about the secret of becoming a successful model.
More pics after the jump 


Thursday, May 19, 2011

Picture Of The Day.......... Rashida Jones

Rashida Jones is the daugther of one of the greatest producers of all time and the man behind the timeless hit 'We are the world' Quincy Jones. She was featured on the spread of men's magazine GQ. Read her interview after the jumpIn this age of Webby, Jezebel-y mud fights about pretty girls, funny girls, and who belongs inside that supposedly slender portion of the Venn diagram where they intersect, Jones is a rare consensus figure. She is tremendously undislikable. Partly that’s because, at 35, she’s been semifamous for only a few years, meaning she’d had the time to become an actual person first (this despite being the offspring of two very famous parents, Quincy Jones and Peggy Lipton). And partly because she has that gift of looking amusingly bemused or agreeably agitated, which comes in handy given the all-star comic ensembles in which she finds herself with staggering regularity. “A question I get asked a lot is ‘What is it like to play the straight guy all the time?’ And I’m totally okay with it,” she says. “I’ll never be the person doing a cartwheel and landing with my skirt over my head. That’s just not who I am.” Her job on Parks and Recreation, which just wrapped up a breakthrough third season, is to provide an occasionally flustered, frequently perplexed center of gravity for the local government lunatics in her orbit. “Every week,” she says, “someone on that show will tickle me in a new and fun way. Wow, that sounds really bad. Please put that next to a topless picture of me in GQ.” Done.

    In this summer’s comedy Our Idiot Brother, there is a hot lesbian make-out scene between Rashida Jones and Zooey Deschanel. This is very likely to be the only fact you will remember from this article. There will be several more facts to come—in due course, we might touch upon Jones’s Harvard degree, her volunteer work with Michelle Obama, her celebrity parents… But after a spoiler alert like that, the rest of this stuff is bound to read the way Charlie Brown’s teacher talks. So perhaps this is a good time to slip in some caveats. To begin with, the make-out scene in question occurs at the family dinner table (not, alas, on the dinner table), and the table is filled with relatives, including one slightly panic-stricken mother. Most distractingly, Jones is wearing a pair of ginormous eyeglasses that look like something a Brooklyn graphic designer swiped off the Unabomber’s face. And yet. Chalk it up to the limitless capacity for the male mind to block out distracting mise-en-scène, but the sequence is still pretty hot. For Jones, it was a personal milestone of another kind: “I feel like I’ve come a long way from my first job, when I had to get mouth-to-mouth resuscitation from Rip Torn.”

Beyonce Names Fela As Her Inpiration.....Discloses How She Got Her Album Title 4



FELA
Remember it was reported here that beyonce sais she is inspired by the late Nigerian Legend Fela. Well in a recent billboard interview the star revealed that she felt Fela's music is sexy..........
“I recorded more than 60 songs: everything I ever wanted to try, I just did it. I started off being inspired by Fela Kuti. I actually worked with the band from “Fela!” for a couple of days, just to get the feel for the soul and heart of his music; it’s so sexy, and has a great groove you get lost in. I loved his drums, all the horns, how everything was on the one. What I learned most from Fela was artistic freedom: he just felt the spirit.”
The singer whose latest album 4 is expected to hit shelves on June 28  revealed that a fan helped her choose the title of her latest album.
.She  decided on 4 as the title after a fan named Shykeem Smith
more after the jump
suggested it to her. It made perfect sense as both her and husband Jay-Z’s birthdays are on the 4th, so is their wedding anniversary, and this is her 4th studio album

If the release date is not pushed this will be her second album she is releasing in June. Her debut album 'Dangerously in love' was also released  in june out of her 4 albums.  Nice!!.






Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Governor Uduaghan's Daughter On The May Cover Of Genevieve Magazine


Orode Jade Uduaghan is the founder of The Pink Pearl Foundation, a non-governmental organisation dedicated to Breast and Cervical Cancer awareness and campaign across the length and breadth of Nigeria.
As a foundation, they have freely screened thousands of women and aided those diagnosed with breast cancer through operation and chemother-apy.
The foundation was established four years ago, and it is not only touching the lives of those in urban areas, but also those in the under-developed rural areas. But here’s the catch: The founder is just 22!


Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Tinsel Stars Grace The Cover Of ZM Mag


The new issue of lifestyle, youth culture and events magazine, Zone Magazine/ZM Style is out. Tinsel lead actors Gideon Okeke (Phillip Ade-Williams), Gbenro Ajibade Emmanuel (Soji Bankole), Damilola Adegbite (Telema Duke) and Matilda Obaseki (Angela Dede) feature on the cover of the latest edition from Zone Media. ZM exclusively profiles the Tinsel stars, as Gbenro and Damilola open up on their steamy on-screen chemistry while Gideon and Matilda speak about their personas and off-screen personalities.

The Tinsel issue comes with two different reverse covers (Zone Magazine). On one side is prominent artiste Wizkid, who speaks on his “grass to grace story and sets the records straight about his many rumoured affairs”.
more after the jump
The second cover features Durella, the King of the Zanga himself. Blaise Aphascea pens his story from ‘Jamb to Camp’ while Habeeb Lawal. Tosyn Bucknor, Wana Udobang and Oge are among the on-air personalities featured alongside the DJs from their respective radio stations.

There are also interviews with Omawumi Megbele, Kunle Afolayan, Abiola Kazeem, and Onome Ovwor. There is also a racy ‘Sex Interviews’ section, featuring Uti Nwachukwu, Denrele Edun, Kelly Hansome and Katung Aduwak, while Caleb Egwuenu enlightens readers on Cervical Cancer.

All these and more can be found in the mag which goes for N500.Get your copies from the nearest vendor, Zone Media’s office: 17, Ezekiel Street, Ikeja, Lagos or call 08038180716, 08023116283 & 08055457619.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Alicia Keys On The Cover Of Essence Magazine

Alicia Keys on the cover of Essence magazine. The artist is celebrating 10 years of the release of her debut album 'Songs in the minor'. She looks good on this mag cover. Marriage is most definitely doing her good cos she is really glowing.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Mercy Johnson In Hot Romance With Gov Oshiomole?

Well this one is according to High Society Mag oh! I wonder where they got their gist from.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Mania Magazine...... Sneak Peek


The highly anticipated  fashion mag 'Mania' is now available for sale and it has Edo State born Entrepreneur Modupe Ozuola on it's cover. This is what the Mania team  had to say about their cover girl

'Our cover girl is a thoroughbred Lagos chic, a TV personality, entrepreneur and philanthropist. A queen of adventure, fearless and firm in disposition but also compassionate, attending dutifully to the whims of the less privileged hence her Non-governmental organisation. The choice of our cover girl was simply a function of her malleable personality, which can balance luxury with cheapies. A media magnet that could place an order for bespoke shoes at Nordstrom and Macy’s and yet tolerates cheap belts and straps from the infamous Yaba railway market; a stretch from two distant social strata.'

more pictures after the jump 






For further enquiries call 07058109821 or visit their office; 15. Deji Odunuga, off Adebayo Mukolu, Anthony Village, Lagos.